Ottawa artist's 'glass fur coat' set to dazzle thousands - Action News
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Ottawa

Ottawa artist's 'glass fur coat' set to dazzle thousands

Ottawa artist Charlynne Lafontaine will have the opportunity to show off her unique take on a classic Canadian garment to thousands of people next month at an international conference on glass art.

Charlynne Lafontaine's piece headed for prestigious Glass Art Society conference

Artist Charlynne Lafontaine and her glass coat piece called Choice Edible. (Waubgeshig Rice/CBC)

An Ottawa artist will have the opportunity to show off her unique take on a classic Canadian garment to thousands of people next month at an international conference on glass art.

Charlynne Lafontaine'sChoice Edible is made of approximately 8,000 pieces ofblown glass, wire,and bronze, and is inspired by a fur coat her grandmother once owned. After more than a year of meticulousconstruction, the 35-kilogrampiece isnow on display at Ottawa's Loretta Studios and Gallery.
The piece is based on a beaver fur coat that was owned by artist Charlynne Lafontaine's grandmother. (Waubgeshig Rice/CBC)

"I work a lot with found objects...I had my grandmother's old fur coat, and it was one of those coats that had a three-quarters sleeve, and it's not really practical for Canadian winters," said Lafontaine."So I decided to base the glass fur coat on that.I deconstructed her fur coat, and from thatmade a pattern and made this coat."

Coat has 'wowed' glass fans

Lafontaine began work on the unique garment when she learned of aglass fashion show coming up at this year's Glass Art Society's 45th Annual Conference in Corning, N.Y., home to the prestigious Corning Museum of Glass.
Choice Edible took more than a year to make. (Waubgeshig Rice/CBC)

"There'll be about 2,000 people attending the conference, and all glass people, which is really exciting for me, because sometimes I feel a little isolated," she said."There aren't that many glass people in Ottawa. There are a few, we all know each other. But it will be fun to exhibit my work on a large scale."

Lafontaine says she's "really happy" with how the piece turned out, and that it's "wowed" a lot of people who've seen it.

She says creating Choice Edibleby deconstructing her grandmother's old fur coat also becamea fun history lesson.
Choice Edible is made of blown glass pieces, wire and a bronze screen. (Waubgeshig Rice/CBC)

"(The coat) was from Holt Renfrew, but then when I removed the lining, and I started taking apart the pieces, you could see the trapper stamps, and then the government approval stamps, and then the manufacturing stamps on the different pelts," she said."So that was kind of a history lesson for me."

The Glass Art Society's conference takes place June 9-11.
Lafontaine will exhibit the piece at the Glass Art Society conference in Corning, N.Y., in June. (Waubgeshig Rice/CBC)
Lafontaine's friend Kurt Walther models the glass fur coat. (Charlynne Lafontaine)